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Corrections: July 28, 2013

An article last Sunday about big banks’ exploitation of commodities pricing regulations to increase storage fees for aluminum held in bank-owned warehouses misstated the increase in customer waiting time for purchases to be retrieved from a warehouse purchased three years ago by Goldman Sachs. The wait has increased about tenfold, to 16 months from six weeks — not twentyfold.

INTERNATIONAL

An article on Monday about the continuing struggle to end the violence in Indian-controlled Kashmir misspelled the given name of a lawyer for a police officer arrested in a plot to hire militants to, among other things, plant a grenade outside a fortified police station in Thathri. He is Ashish Gupta, not Rashish.

METROPOLITAN

The App City column in some editions last Sunday, about apps used to hail cabs, referred incorrectly to the app tested last year by the column and found to be “exorbitantly expensive.” It was Sedan Magic, not Taxi Magic.

SPORTS

An article last Sunday about a renovation plan for Daytona International Speedway referred incorrectly to the reduction of seats in the plan in one instance. As noted elsewhere in the article, the capacity of the track will be reduced by 31 percent, leaving about one-third fewer seats, not “one-third as many.”

An art review on Friday about “Mind Is Outer Space,” at the Casey Kaplan gallery in Manhattan, misspelled the surname of an artist and referred incorrectly to his work in the show. He is Josh Tonsfeldt, not Tonfeldt, and while the work resembles a slide projection it is an HD video projection of still images, not a slide projection.

An article on July 14 about Singapore and its evolving agritourism initiatives misidentified the organization that helps people and institutions build gardens. It is the volunteer-driven Ground-Up Initiative, not the “bespoke urban farm consultancy” at Singapore’s Edible Gardens.

ARTS & LEISURE

An article last Sunday about the singer Robin Thicke and his hit “Blurred Lines” misstated Pharrell Williams’s role in the 2006 album “The Evolution of Robin Thicke.” He was the executive producer, not the producer. The album was produced by Mr. Thicke and Projay. The song “Wanna Love You Girl” from that album was produced by the duo the Neptunes, of which Mr. Williams is a member.

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The Video column on July 7, about the 1975 film “Hard Times,” misidentified the actor who plays a local champion and inflicts a quick and ignominious defeat on an opponent. He was Fred Lerner, not Robert Tessier, who plays another fighter in the film.

MAGAZINE

An article on July 14 about Jubba Airways, an airline flying in Somalia, misstated the number of engines on the Ilyushin-18 aircraft that the airline used in its early days. The plane has four turboprop engines, not two.

STYLE

An article last Sunday about summer camps that limit care packages sent by campers’ parents misattributed a warning from Camp Kabeyun in Alton Bay, N.H., that boys must come to the office during rest hour and open packages with a counselor, who will confiscate food and candy. It was posted on the camp’s Web site; it was not a quotation from Ken Robbins, the camp’s director. The article also incorrectly transcribed part of that warning. It says, “Their time in the office opening packages in the office is time away from their cabin mates and counselors,” not “Your children’s time opening packages in the office is time away from their cabin mates and counselors.”

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A correction in this space last Sunday for the Thathri Journal article, about the continuing struggle to end the violence in Indian-controlled Kashmir, misstated the day the article was published. It was Monday, July 22 — not Sunday, July 21, which was the day it was posted on nytimes.com.